We can also cut by heat - heat punch. And we also can cut by cold - extreme cold. When you cut with heat, it makes a mark. With cold, no mark. It depends on the fabric.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When the weather is really hot, I tend to live in denim cut-offs.
I never met a cold cut I didn't like.
I have certain signatures, certain cutting principles. It could be a raw-edged seam; it could be leaving the lining of sheepskin exposed so it's not perfectly finished. I invent new ways to do it, but the end goal is always the same.
So, I was always frustrated having to write and having to cut things. Why should you have to cut anything?
For me, growing up in Detroit, scarves meant cold weather. But I remember working in a store, and we had some silk scarves - like, wide scarves with fringe - and because I had seen the English rockers wearing skinny silk scarves, I took the scarves, cut and sewed them, and made them long - almost like a tie.
Not only strike while the iron is hot, but make it hot by striking.
Heat can also be produced by the impact of imperfectly elastic bodies as well as by friction. This is the case, for instance, when we produce fire by striking flint against steel, or when an iron bar is worked for some time by powerful blows of the hammer.
The cut of a garment speaks of intellect and talent and the color of temperament and heart.
I want a woman to feel the cut of the scissors in the clothes.
Cuts of clothes and shapes of clothes are really important.
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